Welcome, Guest! - or

New York - 300 Nazis Live Free in United States

Published on:   Jul 19, 2009 at 08:30 AM
News Source:  NY Post
Change text size Text Size  

New York - Three-hundred Nazis are living in plain sight in the United States, according to the world's preeminent Nazi-hunting organization.

Although the case against John Demjanjuk, the former Ohio auto worker formally charged with war crimes in Germany last week, is being called the last great Nazi war-crimes trial, Efraim Zuroff said there are hundreds more suspects to be brought to justice.

"We don't have much longer," said Zuroff, of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Israel. "We have to go after them or they will be too sick to bring to trial."

Many of the Nazis still here are elderly men who worked and raised families in the United States and whose neighbors were unaware of their past, including:

* Mykola Wasylyk of upstate Ellenville, who ran a Catskills bungalow colony renting cabins to Jewish visitors. He served as a perimeter guard at the Trawniki labor camp in Poland. He proclaimed in a 2002 letter to the US attorney that he was forced into Nazi service and that he had been "an exemplary and law-abiding citizen" for the last 54 years.

* Jakiw Palij of Queens, who quietly tends his flower garden every morning outside his Jackson Heights home. He was a guard at Trawniki and found to have helped keep prisoners from escaping the camp where 6,000 people were shot to death in one of the largest single massacres of the Holocaust.

Advertisement:

* Johann Leprich, a retired tool-and-die worker from Michigan, who was a "Death Head" guard at the Mauthausen Concentration Camp, where inmates were used as slave laborers in a quarry and tortured and killed by gassing, hanging and electric shock.

* Elfriede Rinkel, who lived such a seemingly ordinary life as a San Francisco furrier that her Jewish husband knew nothing about her past. Rinkel worked as a guard at the Ravensbruck Concentration Camp for women in Germany, where guards were known for forcing malnourished inmates to march to slave-labor sites daily and then kept in check by attack dogs.

The number of Nazis who came to the United States after World War II has been estimated from a few hundred to several thousand. Hundreds of thousands of Nazis are thought to have survived the war, many of them staying in the countries where they committed their crimes.

Since 1979, 107 Nazis have been prosecuted in the United States and at least 60 have been deported. Eleven suspected Nazis are now being prosecuted, and another 30 are under investigation.

Such investigations can take years.

"These are the ultimate cold cases," said Eli Rosenbaum, the director of the US Department of Justice's Office of Special Investigations, which hunts Nazis and other human-rights abusers.

Cooperating witnesses were either murdered by the Nazis or have since died, and most of the criminals were not known by name to their victims, Rosenbaum said.

"The Nazis destroyed much of the incriminating documentation in the closing months of the war when they realized that an Allied victory was imminent, [and] the bulk of the surviving documentation is scattered in archives in many countries and remains poorly indexed," he said.

The DOJ usually snares Nazis on immigration violations, contending they lied about their past when they entered the United States, and by proving their underlying criminal conduct during the war.

Five Nazis brought to justice and stripped of their US citizenship are stuck in a deportation limbo with no countries agreeing to take them.

In Israel, Zuroff spends much of his time persuading countries in Europe, the former Soviet Union and Australia to prosecute Nazis.

While Israel was the site of probably the most important Nazi war-crime trial, that of Adolf Eichmann in 1961, the country has recently shied away from accepting other Nazis prosecuted on immigration issues in the United States.

Zuroff said in order to try these Nazis in Israel, a case would have to be brought on criminal charges, which would be difficult to prove since so much time has elapsed.


More of today's headlines

Gaza Strip, Gaza - Among those leading the latest attempt by international radical leftists to enter Gaza was New York City Councilman Charles Barron, who is running for... Veendam, Netherlands - A fire in the northeast of the Netherlands has destroyed two wooden barracks in which Anne Frank was detained at the end of World War II. The two...

 

Total5

Read Comments (5)  —  Post Yours »

1

 Jul 19, 2009 at 09:26 AM Manchem Says:

"Mykola Wasylyk of upstate Ellenville, who ran a Catskills bungalow colony renting cabins to Jewish visitors". WOW!!!

2

 Jul 19, 2009 at 10:28 AM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #1  
Manchem Says:

"Mykola Wasylyk of upstate Ellenville, who ran a Catskills bungalow colony renting cabins to Jewish visitors". WOW!!!

Many Nazi-types and Antisemitic creeps indeed have a perverse admiration and affection for Jews.

3

 Jul 20, 2009 at 12:15 PM Rippin Pinchas Says:

Another issue in the Nazi-hunting scheme is the US government itself. For example, Werner Von Braun, the brains behind NASA, was a former Nazi war criminal. Yet he lived openly in Huntsville, Alabama until his death in 1987. He and a number of others came to the US through operation paperclip, a US-sponsored program, in the early 1950's. In other countries like Canada and Brazil the situation of former Nazi havens is much worse.

4

 Jul 21, 2009 at 01:31 AM me Says:

Reply to #3  
Rippin Pinchas Says:

Another issue in the Nazi-hunting scheme is the US government itself. For example, Werner Von Braun, the brains behind NASA, was a former Nazi war criminal. Yet he lived openly in Huntsville, Alabama until his death in 1987. He and a number of others came to the US through operation paperclip, a US-sponsored program, in the early 1950's. In other countries like Canada and Brazil the situation of former Nazi havens is much worse.

Although Werner von Braun was a Nazi and he worked at a facility that employed Jewish slave laborers I don't know if he was involved or even accused of atrocities. He doesn't automatically become a war criminal. Many of the ex-Nazi scientist went to Egypt after the war and were employed by the Egyptians. Other Like Kurt Waldheim were elected to positions like the secretary general of the United Nations and then, after he was unmasked as nazi war criminal and barred entry to the United States, he was elected president of Austria by his proud countrymen. Isn't it nice to know that some things never change?

5

 Jul 21, 2009 at 07:13 PM yemach shemom Says:

may all you evil animals (no, wiat that is insulting to animals!) get repayed for alltthe horrible things you did!, how can you live with yourself, you played G-d, thinking it was your desicion to choose who dies and who lives !

6

If you wish to post anonymously do not fill out this field.
Says:

Your email address will not be published.

Reply to #  
Says:

Important: Please read the rules before submitting your opinion.
Scroll Up
Advertisements: